Literature DB >> 11791980

Malaria in the first 6 months of life in urban African infants with anemia.

B M Afolabi1, L A Salako, A G Mafe, U B Ovwigho, K A Rabiu, N O Sanyaolu, M M Ibrahim.   

Abstract

A total of 446 infants in the first 6 months of life who presented at an urban children's hospital with complaints of any illness whatsoever were recruited into a study with the aim of determining the contribution of malaria to infant morbidity in a malaria-endemic urban area in Nigeria. Sixty-eight of the infants were in their first month of life and 79, 77, 61, 97, and 64 were in their second, third, fourth, fifth and sixth month of life, respectively. Overall, 107 (24.0%) infants were clinically diagnosed as having malaria. This included 3 who were in the first month of life, 12 in the second, 15 in the third, 17 in the fourth, 33 in the fifth, and 27 in the sixth months of life (4.4, 15.2, 19.5, 27.9, 34.0, and 42.1%, respectively). Laboratory investigations confirmed 35 (32.7%) of those clinically diagnosed and 86 (25.4%) of those not clinically diagnosed (n = 339) as having malaria parasitemia, giving an overall malaria parasite rate of 27.1% among the infants. Acute respiratory infection was the major diagnosis (41.3%) among those that were not initially diagnosed as malaria but turned out to have malaria parasitemia followed by gastroenteritis (11.8%) and failure to growth (1.5%). Overall geometric mean parasite density was 202.5 parasites/microL of blood (range, 12-65,317 parasites/microL of blood). The mean hematocrit of infants with parasites (33.0%) was significantly lower (P < 0.005) than that of infants without parasites (35.1%). The mean hematocrit of infants with malaria parasites in each age group was lower than that of infants without malaria parasites in the corresponding age group. Among the infants with malaria parasites, those aged 2 to 2.9 months recorded the lowest mean hematocrit (30.1%), and those aged < 1 month recorded the highest mean hematocrit (42.7%). Axillary temperature increased and hematocrit decreased with increase in parasite density. The percentage of infants with anemia likewise increased as the parasite density increased. Plasmodium falciparum was present in all infected infants, but mixed infection with P. malariae was present in only 2.5% of infections. Analysis of our data suggests an urgent need for health education of caretakers and for training of clinicians for increased awareness of malaria as an important cause of illness and anemia in infants aged < 6 months so as to reduce children's wasting due to an easily preventable and treatable disease.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11791980     DOI: 10.4269/ajtmh.2001.65.822

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Trop Med Hyg        ISSN: 0002-9637            Impact factor:   2.345


  19 in total

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3.  Low birth weight and incidence of first malaria episode and adherence to malaria treatment protocols in infants in Chikwawa district, Malawi.

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4.  Vivax malaria: a major cause of morbidity in early infancy.

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Journal:  Clin Infect Dis       Date:  2009-06-15       Impact factor: 9.079

5.  A hospital-based estimate of major causes of death among under-five children from a health facility in Lagos, Southwest Nigeria: possible indicators of health inequality.

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6.  Highly effective therapy for maternal malaria associated with a lower risk of vertical transmission.

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Journal:  J Infect Dis       Date:  2011-09-09       Impact factor: 5.226

7.  Malaria Prevalence among Young Infants in Different Transmission Settings, Africa.

Authors:  Serign J Ceesay; Lamine Koivogui; Alain Nahum; Makie Abdoulie Taal; Joseph Okebe; Muna Affara; Lama Eugène Kaman; Francis Bohissou; Carine Agbowai; Benoit Gniouma Tolno; Alfred Amambua-Ngwa; N Faly Bangoura; Daniel Ahounou; Abdul Khalie Muhammad; Stephan Duparc; Kamal Hamed; David Ubben; Kalifa Bojang; Jane Achan; Umberto D'Alessandro
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8.  Malaria care in infants aged under six months in Uganda: an area of unmet needs!

Authors:  Martin Kayitale Mbonye; Sarah M Burnett; Sarah Naikoba; Robert Colebunders; Kristien Wouters; Marcia R Weaver; Jean Pierre Van Geertruyden
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2015-04-10       Impact factor: 3.240

9.  Malaria in infants below six months of age: retrospective surveillance of hospital admission records in Blantyre, Malawi.

Authors:  Beatriz Larru; Elizabeth Molyneux; Feiko O Ter Kuile; Terrie Taylor; Malcolm Molyneux; Dianne J Terlouw
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Review 10.  Malaria in infants aged less than six months - is it an area of unmet medical need?

Authors:  Umberto D'Alessandro; David Ubben; Kamal Hamed; Serign Jawo Ceesay; Joseph Okebe; Makie Taal; Eugene Kaman Lama; Moussa Keita; Lamine Koivogui; Alain Nahum; Kalifa Bojang; Aja Adam Jagne Sonko; Honorat Francis Lalya; Bernard Brabin
Journal:  Malar J       Date:  2012-12-02       Impact factor: 2.979

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